YES! with Marv; Skipping Huang; More Liberals Than Molinari's
- Networks
won't say what Clinton supposedly did, but they aren't so reticent
when it comes to Marv Albert.
- Republicans
accept two legal donations. CNN reports. John Huang raises money
illegally while at Commerce. CNN ignores.
- Susan
Molinari's move to CBS upsets journalists, but they have not
expressed such concern for the larger list of liberal revolvers.
- In class-envy
mode Dan Rather insists a capital gains tax will benefit the
wealthy, but he ignores how most payers are middle class.
1) As
illustrated in the May 28 CyberAlert, the networks refused to get
specific about what Paula Jones contends Bill Clinton demanded. But,
as suggested to me by a CyberAlert recipient, they were willing to get
graphic with Marv Albert.
One case in point: CBS. On
the May 27 CBS Evening News, reporter Jim Stewart said of Paula Jones:
"She has charged that, as Governor of Arkansas, Clinton invited
her to a room in this Little Rock hotel in 1991 and made sexual
advances..."
But the morning after Marv
Albert was indicted CBS was less reticent. On the May 21 This Morning
reporter Troy Roberts relayed that "the indictment handed out by
a Virginia grand jury alleges the sportscaster forced the woman to
perform oral sex..."
2) Legal
Republican fundraising is newsworthy to CNN, but illegal fundraising
by a Clinton official in collusion with the DNC isn't worth mention by
the cable network, nor the broadcast networks.
On Friday's (May 23) The
World Today, MRC news analyst Clay Waters noticed, CNN anchor Leon
Harris announced:
"Well there's something
big out on the campaign money trail. The National Republican Party
cashed one of the largest political contributions ever by a husband
and wife. The founder of Amway and a longtime Republican supporter and
his wife each wrote checks for $500,000. The million dollar
contribution is legal because it is so-called soft money. But the
donation's sheer size staggers many political observers. The head of
one non-partisan group that studies campaign financing says, quote,
'It's another example of the level of greed party leaders have.'"
As opposed to the level of
greed in the television news industry where CNN's Ted Turner is
enticing Tom Brokaw with a $7 million per year offer.
Two days later, a headline in
the May 25 Los Angeles Times declared: "Huang Helped to Raise
Funds While at Agency: Law Prohibited Clinton Appointee from
Soliciting Donations to DNC While at Commerce Dept." Reporters
Glenn Bunting and Alan Miller disclosed:
"With the assistance of
the Democratic Party, Clinton administration appointee John Huang
participated in raising political donations in 1995 while serving as a
government official who was prohibited by law from soliciting campaign
funds, according to newly available records and interviews.
"Huang, the central
figure in Justice Department and congressional investigations into
campaign finance abuses, helped generate at least $52,000 from four
Asian American donors in the months before he left the Commerce
Department to become a full-time fund-raiser for the Democratic
National Committee.
"On at least three
occasions, the DNC listed Huang's wife, Jane, as the 'solicitor' for
large donations even though party officials recalled that she had no
involvement in fund-raising. DNC officials now acknowledge that Jane
Huang's name appears on the donor tracking forms because it would have
been an admission of wrongdoing to credit the contributions to John
Huang, a deputy assistant Commerce secretary at the time. 'They can't
say it was John Huang [soliciting funds] while he was at Commerce,'
said a former top DNC officer. '...What happened is that they got
Huang involved [and] they had to cover it.'"
Coverage of this discovery of
a possibly deliberate effort to hide illegal activity? CNN, which
found the legal donation to the Republican Party noteworthy, ignored
the LA Times revelation on Sunday's World Today. Same for the other
networks. They too skipped it with not a word aired on Sunday's ABC
World News Tonight, CBS Evening News or NBC Nightly News.
3) Republican
Congresswoman Susan Molinari's decision to resign from the House of
Representatives this summer to become co-host of a new CBS News
Saturday morning show, is sure to raise concerns about objectivity and
the revolving door, worries not highlighted when it's a liberal who
flips between politics and the media. You may be seeing this
apprehension expressed in your Thursday morning paper. Indeed, CNN's
Crossfire devoted itself to the matter Wednesday night with Washington
Post media reporter Howard Kurtz facing off against Tony Blankley.
"It has renewed debate
over what some call the revolving door between politics and the
media," observed CNN's Bernard Shaw on Wednesday's Inside
Politics. Reporter Jonathan Karl noted that "The path from
politics to the news media is well-traveled but unlike others pols
turned media stars, like George Stephanopoulos, Jesse Jackson and Pat
Buchanan, Molinari and her new boss insists she will be an objective
news anchor."
She can't be any less
objective than Dan Rather, who asked her during CBS coverage of the
Republican convention last August: "I want to read you a quote, a
party official here said that the role of the prime time speakers,
that would include you, is to confuse voters about the real influence
of your party's most conservative wing and the, quote, 'Christian
right.' Are you part of that effort?"
For that matter, how could
she be any less objective than Bryant Gumbel was on the Today show?
At a press conference
Wednesday CBS announced that the show, "CBS News Saturday
Morning," will debut September 13. Molinari, the AP reported,
said she envisions the show as "60 Minutes meets Rosie
O'Donnell," whatever that means.
Some "talking
points" to cite in any discussions of the revolving door prompted
by Molinari:
-- CBS hardly hired a
right-winger. She's pro-choice and pro-gun control. Even the
Washington Post tagged her as "moderate" and the AP
suggested that "close friends say the pro-choice, moderate
Republican had become increasingly frustrated with the party's
conservative drift."
-- Many more liberals than
conservatives revolve between media and political slots. As of the May
MediaWatch, the MRC's Revolving Door count stood at 322
liberals/Democrats versus just 82 conservatives/Republicans. The
latest liberal example was noted by the Washington Post's John Carmody
in his Wednesday column: "Also at ABC News: Chicago Mayor Richard
Daley's Press Secretary, Jim Williams, is leaving Hizzoner to join the
network's Midwest bureau in Chicago as a correspondent."
-- Yes, Molinari is
high-profile, but how much media outrage did you hear when former
Senator Bill Bradley (D-NJ) joined CBS News in April? I'm still
waiting for the first story. Bradley was expected to produce stories,
starting this summer, for the weekend editions of the CBS Evening
News. But asked about who would co-host with Molinari, the AP reported
that CBS News President Andrew Heyward "would not rule out former
Sen. Bill Bradley."
-- A January 1995 MediaWatch
study determined: "In just two years, more than twice as many
members of the media have joined the Clinton administration (33) as
jumped to the Bush team in four years (15). The study counted those
with influence over news coverage at a national media outlet who left
to take a politically appointed slot with the administrations. Those
who decided to join Clinton's team held higher profile or more
influential media slots than did those whom Bush attracted:
>While no on-air network
TV reporter joined the Bush team, so far six have taken Clinton jobs.
>Ten network producers,
executives, and researchers have made the jump to Clinton's staff,
compared to just three during the Bush years.
>Another 13 major
newspaper and magazine reporters hopped aboard the Clinton team while
just eight put in a stint for Bush.
Here are some examples of
those with Clinton ties. [Updates in brackets.]
Donald Baer: Director
of White House speechwriting and research, 1994-; U.S. News &
World Report Asst. Managing Editor, 1991-94; Senior Ed.,1988-91
Douglas Bennet:
Assistant Secretary of State for intergovernmental orgs., 1993-;
President of National Public Radio (NPR), 1983-93
Carolyn Curiel: White
House speechwriter, 1993-; Nightline producer, 1992; New York Times
editor, 1988-92; Washington Post editor, 1986-88
David French: Deputy
Director for Communications, CIA, 1993-; CNN weekend Washington anchor
and reporter, early 1980s-1993
Rick Inderfurth:
Deputy to UN Ambassador Madeleine Albright, 1993-; ABC News reporter,
1981-1991 (Pentagon, national security, Moscow) [Inderfurth has now
been nominated Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs.]
Thomas Ross: Special
Asst. to the President and Senior Director for Public Affairs at the
National Security Council (NSC), 1994-; Senior Vice President, NBC
News, 1986-89
Tara Sonenshine:
Special Asst. to the President and Dep. Director for communications,
National Security Council, 1994 Editorial Producer, ABC News
Nightline, 1991-94; D.C. bureau producer, '82-89. [She since left the
NSC to be a reporter in Newsweek's Washington bureau, then earlier
this year she jumped back to the NSC.]
Carl Stern: Director
of Public Affairs, Justice Dept, 1993-; NBC News Washington reporter,
1967-93 (legal affairs and Supreme Court) [Stern left the Justice
Dept. late last year.]
Strobe Talbott: Deputy
Secretary of State, 1994-; Ambassador-at-Large to the former Soviet
Republics, 1993-94; Time Editor-at-Large 1989-92; Time Washington
Bureau Chief 1985-89
4) Dan Rather
never misses an opportunity to generate class warfare and emphasize
how the wealthy will make out best. MRC news analyst Steve Kaminski
caught the latest instance. On the May 23 CBS Evening News, Rather
intoned:
"On Capitol Hill, the
Senate voted overwhelming approval today for the big balanced budget
blueprint. Supporters of the plan say it would balance the budget in
five years, provide $85 billion in tax breaks mostly for families with
children, cut the capital gains tax which would help immediately the
wealthy, and save $321 billion out of Medicare, Defense and other
spending...."
A capital gains cut wouldn't
help anyone who is not rich? Really? As USA Today reporter Anne
Willette asserted in a May 5 story: "The explosion in stock
ownership, especially through mutual funds, has made capital gains
taxes a middle class issue. Some 84 percent of taxpayers reporting
capital gains income earned less than $100,000."
And some people actually
worry that Molinari will bring a bias to the journalistically pure CBS
News.
--
Brent Baker
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts
Media Reality Check | Notable Quotables | Contact
the MRC | Subscribe
|